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Die deutsche Bundesregierung engagiert sich stärker im Irak, um der brutalen, vor Völkermord nicht zurückschreckenden Miliz Islamischer Staat (IS) Einhalt zu gebieten. Das ist gut und richtig – auch wenn man die langfristigen Konsequenzen des Instruments der Waffenlieferung kritisch sehen muss. Nach ersten (zaghaften) Änderungen in der deutschen Afrikapolitik sowie einer aktiven Rolle bei Eindämmungsversuchen in der Ukrainekrise ist dies nun das nächste Zeichen, dass es Deutschland ernst meint, mit einer aktiveren Außen- und Sicherheitspolitik. Leider vergisst die Bundesregierung einmal mehr, Politikwechsel im Auswärtigen auch im Inneren transparent zu erklären...
Dass die EU und die USA auf die russischen Machenschaften in der Ukraine mit Sanktionen reagiert haben, ist ebenso verständlich wie richtig. Darauf zu bauen, dass diese Maßnahmen Russland zu einer Kurskorrektur bewegen, wäre dagegen fatal. Dass die Sanktionen wirkungslos bleiben, ist nämlich noch die eindeutig bessere Aussicht. Im schlimmeren Fall aber unterstützen die Sanktionen gefährliche Tendenzen der russischen Selbstisolation und sind damit sogar kontraproduktiv. Anstatt auf den Erfolg von Sanktionen zu hoffen, sollte Europa auf eine offene wie ebenbürtige, kritische Auseinandersetzung mit Russland und ein Appellieren an dessen Verantwortung als Großmacht setzen...
Nur wenige Tage bleiben bis zur Eröffnung der olympischen Winterspiele in Sotschi. Für 3,5 Milliarden Zuschauer stehen dann 14 Tage Spaß und spannende Unterhaltung auf dem Programm. Dabei scheint kaum zu interessieren, dass in unmittelbarer Nachbarschaft zum Tagungsort derweil fundamentalste Menschenrechte verletzt werden. Denn während andere Menschenrechtsthemen wie die Situation von Homosexuellen in Russland bereits Debatten über einen möglichen Olympia-Boykott ausgelöst haben, redet bislang über die Lage im Nordkaukasus kaum einer...
This is the eleventh article in our series on refugees. I came to Frankfurt four months ago. Before that, I had lived in Trentino, Italy, for 14 years. But with the European economic crisis, everything has become difficult; I finally lost my job and decided to go to Germany to give it a new try. Everybody knows that in Germany there are much better chances to get work because the economy doesn’t have such big problems like in Italy, Greece and Spain...
Mehr Geld für BND und Verfassungsschutz, bessere Vernetzung der europäischen Datenbanken, die Schaffung eines Ein- und Ausreiseregisters, die Übermittlung von europäischen Fluggastdaten an die Sicherheitsbehörden der EU-Mitgliedsstaaten, mehr Videoüberwachung, Kennzeichenlesesysteme, Biometrie – und vieles mehr. Detaillierte Angaben dazu, ob die angepeilten Maßnahmen überhaupt wirksam sind, werden selten gegeben. Politische Entscheidungsträger denken sich in der Regel nicht selbst aus, was gebraucht wird, vielmehr werden von den Sicherheitsbehörden Bedarfe angemeldet, die ihrer Arbeitslogik entsprechen. Und die sagt im Zweifelsfall: mehr hilft mehr. So sind im Zuge der Bekämpfung des Terrorismus im Laufe der letzten 15 Jahre unzählige verdachtsabhängige und verdachtsunabhängige Maßnahmen ergriffen worden. Allein auf Ebene der EU waren es mehr als 250...
In den letzten Jahren ist die Weltöffentlichkeit Zeuge vieler sozialer Proteste und auch einiger neuen Protestformen geworden: Sei es die revoltierende Jugend im sogenannten Arabischen Frühling, die Indignados in Spanien, die 99% der Occupy-Bewegung oder lokale Proteste gegen Staudammprojekte im Amazonas und Stadtentwicklungspolitik in Berlin und Hamburg - überall versammeln und organisieren sich in zunehmendem Maße Menschen, um gemeinsam zu protestieren und Widerstand zu leisten. Der gemeinsame Nenner all dieser spezifisch doch recht unterschiedlichen Bewegungen ist, dass sie durch die neuen Kommunikationstechnologien ganz neue Formen des kollektiven Protests hervorgebracht haben.
WikiLeaks hat mit der Veröffentlichung der Afghan War Logs im Juli 2010 die Einsätze von U.S.-Spezialeinheiten in Afghanistan in den Fokus der Öffentlichkeit katapultiert: Die U.S.-Task Force 373 (TF-373) jagt in Afghanistan Terroristen und Talibanführer. Ihr Auftrag ist es, diese gefangen zu nehmen oder zu töten. Die ISAF-Staaten führen dazu eine Joint Priority Effects List (JPEL), mit den Spalten Capture und Kill, jedoch unterliegen die U.S.-Einheiten dem Mandat der Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF). Die Einsätze unterliegen stets der Geheimhaltung und finden auch im deutschen Mandatsgebiet in Nordafghanistan statt. Hier greifen U.S.-Einheiten auf deutsche Infrastruktur und auf logistische Unterstützung durch die Bundeswehr zurück.Die veröffentlichten Dokumente enthüllen somit ein Problem der deutschen Afghanistanpolitik: Durch die indirekte Beteiligung der Bundeswehr an diesen Einsätzen drängt sich die Frage auf, inwieweit hier eine demokratische Legitimation und die grundgesetzlich-etablierte parlamentarische Kontrollfunktion gegeben sind. Denn problematisch wird die Unterstützerrolle der Bundeswehr im Regional Command North (RC-North), sobald sie den Bereich des parlamentarischen Mandats verlässt. Das OEF-Mandat für die Bundeswehr – das den Einsatz von bis zu 100 Soldaten des Kommando Spezialkräfte vorsah – wurde Ende 2008 nicht verlängert; das Engagement in Nordafghanistan findet seit dem nur noch im Rahmen der Sicherheits- und Aufbaumission ISAF statt...
On 11 February, the World Fought back against Mass Surveillance. See those capital letters? They denote Things that Matter – somehow. We don’t necessarily know who ‘We’ are, what the ‘World’ is, nor whether the Mass Surveillance We’re against is the big and sexy kind run by acronymized (foreign) government agencies that We all recently learned about through Edward Snowden or the everyday kind conducted by means of cookies, computer profiles and GPS data we all send to whomever is watching in the course of a normal day’s activities, like checking Facebook, leaving the house to buy some bread or sending family pictures over the holidays via email. But ‘We’ ‘Fought’ ‘Them’, or maybe ‘It’.
Out of area or out of business?: the bourgeois parochialism of international studies conferences
(2014)
Most face-to-face interaction with other IR types happens at conferences, and it’s easy to break conferences down by profile and inclusiveness. The ISA annual conference is supposed to rate pretty highly on both, and almost everyone has been a few times by the end of their post-grad careers. Then there are the conferences that are high profile but less inclusive. APSA, BISA, the ISA regional conferences, and the newly constituted EISA are fairly high profile in that most IR professionals have heard of them, but they’re less inclusive in that few of us would cross broad bodies of water and long customs lines to participate...
Trust me, I’m an expert
(2014)
Given such phenomena as the dramatic leaks of the last decade, the vibrantand inflammatory discourse about ‘cyberwar’ and the conflation of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement with the ‘backbone of the European economy’, regulation of what the Internet is supposed to be and what people are allowed to do in it is always and everywhere about security, whether users like it or not. And that regulation comes from people, special people we like to think of as experts.
It is estimated that a number between 27,000 and 31,000 foreign fighters have been flocking to Iraq and Syria since the breakout of the war in 2011.
An updated assessment of the flow of foreign fighters into Syria and Iraq shows that there is a significant increase in the number of foreign fighters travelling to Syria. Data provided by the Soufan Group in 2014 estimated that the identifiable number of foreign fighters is approximately 12,000 from 81 countries. It was also believed that the number of foreign Jihadists coming form Western countries does not exceed 3000: “Around 2,500 are from Western countries, including most members of the European Union, the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand”, according to Soufan’s initial report on Foreign Fighters in Syria. Now the number exceeds 27,000 foreign fighters from at least 86 countries...
In den letzten drei Jahrzehnten haben sich die politischen, ökonomischen, sozialen und kulturellen Strukturen unserer Welt auf verschiedenen Ebenen radikal verändert. Das Interesse am Islam ist nicht nur in wissenschaftlichen Arbeiten und Zeitschriften gestiegen, sondern auch in allen anderen westlichen Medien. Dieses Interesse wurde unter Anderem durch die Islamisch-Iranische Revolution von 1979, die Fatwa gegen den Buchautor von „Die satanischen Verse“ Salman Rushdie 1989, die Golfkriege Anfang der 90er Jahre, den Balkankonflikt als auch die Einwanderung von Migranten mit islamischem Hintergrund in Europa gefördert...
Authoritarian regimes and religious institutions in the Muslim majority world see eye-to-eye on the topic of atheism. United by their fear of losing control over their populations and their desire for conformity, consecutive governments have pushed for unfair restrictions on their subjects’ beliefs since their inception. But even in society, non-belief remains a taboo. Should atheists in Muslim majority world become more vocal?
Atheism remains one of the most extreme taboos in Saudi Arabia. It is a red line that no one can cross. Atheists in Saudi Arabia have been suffering from imprisonment, maginalisation, slander, ostracisation and even execution. Indeed, atheists in Saudi are considered terrorists. Efforts for normalisation between those who believe and those who don’t remain bleak in the kingdom.
Despite constant warnings of Saudi religious authorities of “the danger of atheism”, which is, according to them, “equal to disbelieving in God”, many citizens in the kingdom are turning their back on Islam. Perhaps inter alia the Saudi dehumanising strict laws in the name of Islam, easy access to information and mass communication are the primary driving forces pushing Saudis to leave religion. Unfortunately, those who explicitly do, find themselves harshly punished or forced to live dual lives.
The role of social groups in making historical events succeed takes shape according to two important factors: Their ability to change and the kind of their contribution to the development of that change in a way or another. The role of social groups especially emerges at times of revolutions and their subsequent changes on the political, socioeconomic and even intellectual levels. The most active and capable group to achieve change is the group of youth and students. In the revolutionary movements in Latin America, for instance, students prominently contributed to the fall down of long-lasting totalitarian dictatorships such in Chile, Brazil and Argentina. In the Arab uprisings in 2010-2011, students‘ roles varied from one country to another based on three axes of context, networks and contentious practices. This article expands on the role of Egyptian student movement in thriving for change despite the intensified restrictions by the state and how it continued its protest under repressive circumstances as a political actor...
Political rationality as a theory is important in its own right. Government leaders must calculate political costs such as the resources needed to generate support for a policy, the implications of a policy decision for re-election, and the possibility of provoking hostility for decisions not well received. Bounded rationality approach has yielded an enhanced understanding of how government organizations may produce unexpected or even unpredicted policy or program results. With public organizations not operating under full rationality conditions, administrators aspiring toward rationality may nonetheless find their goals undermined by a variety of forces, such as informational uncertainties and non-rational elements of organisational decision-making...
What’s that again? Blasphemy law? An Egyptian court sentenced the Islamic scholar and theologian Islam Al-Buhairi to one year in prison for blasphemy. Al-Buhairi was accused of insulting Islam in his TV show “With Islam Al-Buhairi” on “Al-Qahira wa Al-Nas” channel. Al-Buhairi questioned the “Islamic heritage”, which angered the Al-Azhar scholarship...
Islamic State (IS), previously known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), has shown nothing but destruction, chaos and sectarianism. Through terror strategies, they rapidly spread over great parts of eastern Syria and north and central Iraq. Their new recruits came from all over the world, but mainly from Islamic countries. Arab countries had the biggest share of recruits. While IS was assembling supporters and sympathisers, Sunni Clergymen constantly called for ‘material and moral’ support to the Syrian rebels, and accordingly, thousands of foreign fighters flooded into Syria for Jihad. According to a Soufan Group research in 2014 on the foreign fighters in Syria, it is estimated that the highest number of foreign fighters came from Tunisia (about 3,000), Saudi Arabia (about 2,500), Morocco (about 1,500), Russia (about 800), France (700), Turkey and the United Kingdom (about 400 each). These numbers exclude the Syrians and Iraqis who are already in IS...
Given the current Middle Eastern scenario, one may reasonably hold the argument that the on-going turmoil in the Middle East owes its burden equally to the Machiavellian Anglo-American policies in the region and the harrowing failure of the Muslim governments/leaderships in the Middle East to rationally respond to those challenges. But are there any dimensions beyond religion?
After five years of the Syrian war, we can recognize “four” conflicting parties on the ground – Assad, ISIS, rebel groups and the Kurds. Each one of these conflicting parties has regional and international backers, who ironically do not agree with each other about whom they are fighting for or against. The Syrian regime is backed by Iran, Russia, Hezbollah and Iraqi militias. ISIS is backed by the flood of global Jihadists from all over the world. Rebel groups are backed by Gulf States, Turkey, Jordan and the US. The Kurds are supported by the US. While in the media, we always say “the Syrian conflict, crisis or war”, I wonder what makes this war that much Syrian. It is rather a war on the land of Syria, in which more than 50% of Syria’s population have been displaced, over 220 thousand have been killed, and many more have been injured or imprisoned. According to Amnesty international, more than 12.8 million Syrian people are in “urgent need of humanitarian assistance”. In addition to this humanitarian catastrophe, most of the Syrian land and infrastructure have been destroyed. So what is that Syrian about the Syrian “war”?...
Tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran have been increasing recently. Although the narrative developed to describe the execution of a Saudi Shiite cleric, Nimr Al-Nimr, as a sectarian dimension of the Kingdom’s policies towards Iran, Saudi Arabia’s goals are not principally fuelling the Shiite-Sunni divide. The Saudi executions were partially an attempt by Saudi Arabia to severe ties with Iran and push the tensions forward. Lifting sanctions against Iran, coupled with oil prices plummeting to around $32 per barrel remains a frightening nightmare for the Saudis...
Practicing politics within religious frameworks is more likely to increase states‘ fragility. While employing religious references in political discourses could foster positive outcomes such as avoiding dangerous eruptions of violence under authoritarian regimes, it could also increase the space for political and religious elites to instrumentalise religion for their own interests. Such patterns of instrumentalisation are more common in the Middle East; especially the dominant religion in the region is Islam, which enjoys a decentralised mode of function...
Religion in the Middle East seems to define allies and enemies inside and outside the political borders. On the one hand, Shiite Iran is allies with the Iraqi government, the Houthi rebels in Yemen, Hezbollah in Lebanon, revolutionary forces in Bahrain and the Syrian regime. On the other hand, Sunni Saudi Arabia and other Gulf States, Egypt, Turkey and Sunni elements in the region form an alliance against what they call the expansion of the Iranian influence. There is an unmistaken pattern of alliance in the Middle East, in which states, monarchies and forces seem to define their allies and enemies based on sectarian dimensions, and by which we witness a minority oppressing a majority when it is possible and vice versa across the Middle East including Israel...
Here we go again. Recent terrorist attacks against another European capital city in less than a year continue to shake the core of world politics. It is worth to note that terrorist attacks are not only happening against European states, but also against other countries, most notably Turkey and Indonesia. Is it a clash of cultures, religions, or it is merely politics? How do we keep serving Daesh (Islamic State)?
When the Iranian revolution embarked against Muhammad Reza Shah’s regime in the late 70s, it wasn’t a social revolution aiming at changing the society, but rather a political one with legitimate demands similar to what Syrians once were looking forward to achieve in 2011. When all this started in Iran, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the most central and inspirational figure in the Iranian revolution was still in exile. This is a story that happened 35 years ago and we cannot but see the rhyming of its events with the current Syrian imbroglio...
Using religious frameworks in political contestation and mobilisation processes has become more eminent in recent decades spiralling an intricate debate on the conceptualisation and implementation of such references in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region The contradiction, it is argued, mainly lies in the compromising nature of politics and the relatively dogmatic nature of religion. Accentuated by inaccurate media coverage and primordial analytical frameworks, it has become tempting to see religion as responsible for conflicts and underachievement in the MENA region...
Radicalisation is a phenomenon that has been striking not only in parts of Asia and Africa but also in the heart of Europe. While the number of Muslims in Germany is estimated by 4,7 millions (5,8%), 70% of the almost 900,000 asylum-seekers have arrived in recent years are believed to be Muslims. It is undeniable that there is discrimination in Germany, and it is equally undeniable that more on issues of integration and conflict prevention should be done. Thus, could effective integration processes prevent radicalisation of the Muslim youth in Europe?
This paper explores the various personal and intellectual links between Edmund Husserl, Rudolf and Walter Eucken. Our interdisciplinary approach gives an insight into Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology, Walter Eucken’s Ordoliberalism as well as in the interdependency between phenomenology and economics for which Rudolf Eucken’s philosophy of intellectual life plays an important role. Particular affiliations between phenomenology and economics can be found in the following topics: epistemology, the idea of man, the comprehension of liberty and the importance of legal or social orders, institutional rules and frameworks of regulations.
This paper analyzes the inherent dangers of paternalist economic policies associated with the newly established economic sub-disciplines of behavioral economics, economic happiness research and economic psychology. While the authors in general welcome these sub-disciplines for enriching and critically evaluating mainstream economics – especially their criticism of the Homo oeconomicus-heuristic is of great value contributing to a more realistic idea of man –, the political-economic implications as well as inherent risks of paternalist economic policies should be received with concern and thus be subject to a critical review. The paper is structured as follows: In the first step, we recapitulate Kahneman’s, Thaler/Sunstein’s, and Layard’s versions of paternalism pointing at similarities and differences alike. We contrast libertarian or soft paternalism of behavioral economics (Thaler/Sunstein) and economic psychology (Kahneman) with (Layard’s) happiness economics and its hard paternalism. In the second step, we analyze the political and economic implications and consequences of paternalism. We give an overview of the main points of criticism of paternalism from a constitutional economics perspective. The Ordnungs- vs. Prozesspolitik argument is discussed as well as epistemological, political-economic or idea of man arguments. The paper ends with some concluding remarks.
This is the 22. article in our series Trouble on the Far-Right.
Changing political and economic situations generate new types of political protagonists – the far right is no exception here. Whether its structures and organizational forms endure, whether they diffuse (trans)nationally, whether their models prove successful, depends on various factors. A model that is currently about to serve as a flagship for the far right in Europe is the neo-fascist movement / party CasaPound. So why is this organizational model within the far right in Italy and Europe so successful?
My contribution is intended to shed light on the hybridity of CasaPound and the resulting force for the renewal of fascism. To carry out my argument, I will first describe the evolution of CasaPound from a movement to a party. Then I will discuss strategies and practices in terms of organizational and ideological hybridization, to finally outline the European dimension of the self-proclaimed „fascists of the third millennium“...
This is the fourth article in our series Trouble on the Far-Right.
Terror from the extreme right has again gained a wider public attention in 2011 with the devastating attacks carried out by Anders Behring Breivik in Norway and the detection of the right-wing terrorist cell called “National Socialist Underground” (NSU), which had committed ten murders, three bombings and a dozen bank robberies during more than a decade of time in Germany. In many Western countries violence motivated by racism, anti-government hate, anti-Semitism or other aspects of right-wing extremism, appears to be a regular part of criminal activities. Hate crime legislation and statistics vary strongly but show that next to high intense terrorist attacks such as 9/11, the attacks in London, Madrid or Paris, right-wing violence and terrorism is the most dangerous politically motivated threat. In the United States for example Perliger (2012) counted 4,420 right-wing terrorist incidents between 1990 and 2012 causing 670 fatalities and 3,053 injuries. In Germany official statistics counted 69 right-wing attacks between 1990 and 2015 causing 75 casualties, while civil society watchdogs count up to 184 deaths. In Russia some experts speak of approximately 450 right-wing motivated killings between 2004 and 2010. Nevertheless, this specific form of political violence remains largely under-researched and misunderstood as non-terroristic. In consequence the threat from the far right is continuously downplayed with severe consequences for victims and the internal security.
"Die Flüchtlinge", "die Rassisten" und "Wir" – zu den Ambivalenzen im aktuellen Flüchtlingsdiskurs
(2015)
Dies ist der dritte Artikel unseres Blogfokus zu Flucht und Migration. Die vehemente Verurteilung der verbalen und gewaltvollen Übergriffe auf Geflüchtete, die zivilgesellschaftliche Solidarität, mit der Geflüchtete an Bahnhöfen, in Vereinen und Nachbarschaften Willkommen geheißen werden, die kleinen und großen Gesten privater Flüchtlingshilfe – all dies sind wichtige Signale gegen rassistische Hetze und Abschreckungspolitik. Der Flüchtlingshilfediskurs bleibt dennoch ambivalent und lässt sich aktuell an mindestens drei Fragen diskutieren: Wann verfehlen Positionierungen ‚gegen Rechts‘ das Ziel, rassistische Verhältnisse in der Gesellschaft aufzubrechen? Wann läuft das private Engagement im Flüchtlingsbereich Gefahr, politisches Handeln zu ersetzen? Und welche Schwierigkeiten gehen mit der Konjunktur des ‚Helfer-Wirs‘ einher? Eine Gratwanderung.
Seit langem existiert der Wunsch, Stakeholder, Endnutzer und Bürger am Forschungsprozess über sicherheitsrelevante Themen zu beteiligen. Dies beinhaltet auch die potenziellen Auswirkungen der Forschungsprozeduren und -ergebnisse auf diese Statusgruppen. Bereits im vergangenen Sommer wurden diese Themen in zwei Workshops auf europäischer Ebene behandelt, geladen hatten die Generaldirektion (GD) Forschung und Innovation [link] bzw. die Research Executive Agency der Europäischen Kommission [link]. Unter dem Titel “Challenge of Inclusive, Innovative, and Secure Societies” wurden Synergien, aber auch Konflikte zwischen den strategischen Zielen von gesellschaftlicher Integration, Sicherheit und wirtschaftlichen Innovationen im Rahmen der EU-weiten Sicherheitsforschung analysiert. Die Themenbereiche von gesellschaftlicher Resilienz und von Vertrauen der Bürgern, die bis jetzt eher am Rande der Projektausschreibungen erschienen sind, wurden programmatisch als prioritär eingestuft...
“Es geht darum, wie der Schutz der Bürgerinnen und Bürger erhöht werden kann vor Risiken, wie vor technischen Großunfällen, Extremwettereignissen sowie internationalem Terrorismus und organisierter Kriminalität”, so Thomas Rachel, Parlamentarischer Staatssekretär im Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung anlässlich der Eröffnung des Innovationsforums “Zivile Sicherheit“.
Über 600 Wissenschaftler, Vertreter der High-Tech-Industrie und der Bundesbehörden haben sich am 17.-19. April in Berlin im Café Moskau im Rahmen der 2. Runde des Sicherheitsforschungsprogramms der Bundesregierung getroffen. In den Jahren 2012 bis 2017 will die Bundesregierung für das Rahmenprogramm rund 55 Millionen Euro pro Jahr bereitstellen. Im abgelaufenen Rahmenprogramm von 2007 bis Anfang 2012 hatte das BMBF über 278 Millionen Euro für die Förderung der zivilen Sicherheit bereitgestellt. Insgesamt wurden bisher über 120 Verbundprojekte mit über 600 Einzelprojekten gefördert. Allerdings gingen nur ca. 12 Millionen davon an Verbundprojekte mit explizit gesellschaftswissenschaftlichem Charakter, ansonsten spielten gesellschaftswissenschaftliche Fragestellungen eher marginal eine Rolle, überwiegend als Begleit- und Akzeptanzforschung....
Am 27. Dezember 2015 verabschiedete der Ständige Ausschuss des Nationalen Volkskongresses das erste Antiterrorgesetz in der Geschichte der Volksrepublik China (VRC). Damit wurde eine über 25 Jahre erarbeitete umfangreiche Antiterrorstrategie zu Papier gebracht und mit ihr endlich eine verbindliche rechtliche Definition von „Terrorismus.“ Bereits gängige Praktiken wie öffentliche Medienzensur oder die Verpflichtung von Telekommunikationsunternehmen und Internetprovidern zur Bereitstellung von Inhaltsdaten wurden formalisiert und verschärft, sowie auch die Mobilisierung zivilgesellschaftlicher Organisationen auf eine rechtliche Grundlage gestellt. Allerdings stellt das Gesetz nur den finalen, formalen Schritt einer fünfundzwanzigjährigen Entwicklung dar. Tatsächlich kämpft Beijing seit Anfang der 1990er Jahre in der Provinz Xinjiang mit einer Mischung aus separatistisch und islamistisch motivierter politischer Gewalt, an deren Spitze seit spätestens 2008 das East Turkestan Independence Movement (ETIM) steht. ETIM weist ideell und organisatorisch eine Nähe zu Al Qaeda auf, und arbeitet transnational mit der Islamischen Bewegung Usbekistans, Tehrik-i-Taliban (Pakistan) und der al-Nusra Front (Syrien) zusammen...
This is the seventh article in our series Trouble on the Far-Right.
While one cannot say that the far right movements and ideologies in Latvia are in a state of flux, the current situation in Europe has prompted some developments that could turn into significant trends in the medium to longer term. In turn, these could have an effect on broader European politics, if left unchecked...